Resource Type

States

Effects of Low Levels of X-Rays and Irradiation from C14 and H3 on Cell Population Kinetics in the Root Tip of Tradescantia (open access)

Effects of Low Levels of X-Rays and Irradiation from C14 and H3 on Cell Population Kinetics in the Root Tip of Tradescantia

Reciprocal labelling in double-labelling experiments with H3- and C14- thymidine showed that when H3- thymidine (1μc/ml for 0.5 hr) was given first in the labelling sequence followed by a 4 hr interval before the C14- thymidine treatment, that passage of cells into and out of DNA synthesis was normal. When C14 was first in the sequence, the rate at which cells entered DNA synthesis was decreased. This was attributed to a radiation effect produced by the β-rays from the C14. The rate at which cells entered DNA synthesis was studied after 0.1, 1 and 10 rads of x-rays. A dose of 1 and 10 rads decidedly depressed the rate. Treatment of roots with 2, 20, and 200 μc/ml of tritiated water for 0.5 hr showed that the 2 higher concentrations produced an effect similar to the x-rays. This indicated that somewhere between 1 and 8 disintegrations per cell per 0.5 hr will produce a decrease in the rate at which cells enter DNA synthesis. In both the x-ray and H32O experiments the depression of the rate that cells entered DNA synthesis seemed to reach saturation at the higher doses.
Date: March 25, 1963
Creator: Wimber, Donald E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Parameters of the 132 eV Neutron Resonance in Co 59 (open access)

Parameters of the 132 eV Neutron Resonance in Co 59

An accurate determination of the parameters of the resonance excited by the interaction of the 132 eV neutrons with the Co 59 target nucleus has been made, using the fast choppers at Brookhaven National Laboratory in the United States and Chalk River Laboratory in Canada. Neutron transmission through thick and thin samples resulted in the following parameters: [parameters not transcribed]. In addition, measurements of the resonance capture γ-ray intensity gave the value for the radiation width Γγ= 0.40 ± 0.04 eV, based on the known thermal capture cross section of cobalt of 37.5 barns. The reduced and total resonance capture integrals are calculated from the above parameters to be 50.5 ± 5.5 and 67.0 ± 5.5 barns, respectively. The above results are compared with previously determined resonance parameters and also with direct measurements of the total resonance capture integral.
Date: March 25, 1963
Creator: Jain, A. P.; Chrien, R. E.; Moore, J. A. & Palevsky, H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The History of the Brookhaven Biology Department Mouse Colony No. 1 (Swiss-Bridge-Bagg-O'Grady-Walter Reed Strain) With Endemic Occult Cerebral Encephalitozoönosis and Colony No. 2 (open access)

The History of the Brookhaven Biology Department Mouse Colony No. 1 (Swiss-Bridge-Bagg-O'Grady-Walter Reed Strain) With Endemic Occult Cerebral Encephalitozoönosis and Colony No. 2

Innes, Zemen, Frenkel, Borner and Wright (1962) described an outbreak of encephalitozoönosis of the central nervous system in mice, a summary of which is given below for an understanding of why this appendix may be of interest. When the paper was presented for publication, the editors of the journal decided to omit the history of our mouse colony. In our opinion, to understand (a) how this infection may have arisen and (b) may have spread, and still exist in some colonies, it is of prime importance to know the history of this strain of mice used by us (and others). It also has lessons on the establishment and maintenance of so-called "disease-free" or "specific pathogen-free"* colonies of laboratory animals in general. Information on the history of the mice has been culled from Col. H. Yager, VC, Director of the Division of Veterinary Medicine, Walter Reed Army Institute of Medical Research, Washington, D. C., and from Drs, Clara Lynch and John B. Nelson, Rockefeller Institute, New York.
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Innes, J. R. M. & Borner, G
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wave Functions for Quadrupole Antishielding Factors (open access)

Wave Functions for Quadrupole Antishielding Factors

The purpose of this paper is to present tables of the perturbed wave functions which have been recently obtained in a calculation of the quadruple antishielding factors γ∞ for the Mn+2, Fe+3, Ga+3, and Ag+ ions. The wave functions v'1(nℓ-ℓ) which are tabulated represent the effect of the perturbation due to a nuclear quadruple moment Q on the wave functions of the outermost electrons of the ion core.
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Sternheimer, R. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fluorimetric Assay of α-Chymotrypsin (open access)

Fluorimetric Assay of α-Chymotrypsin

The enzymolysis by α-chymotrypsin of the substrates, N-acetyl-L-tryptophane ethyl ester and N-acetyl-L-tyrosine ethyl ester, was followed by means of fluorescence whose intensity increased fourfold and threefold per mole respectively as substrate was transformed into amino acid. The assay by fluorescence was several orders of magnitude more sensitive than the assay by differential absorption spectra of these substances and was in agreement with it in those concentration regions where both methods overlap. To maintain linearity between concentration and fluorescence intensity, the concentration of substrate should be no greater than 10-4 M/1. In such solutions the rate of esterolysis could be followed with the enzyme at 10-11 M/1.
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Bielski, Benon H. J. & Freed, Simon
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Isochronal Differential Microcalorimeter (open access)

An Isochronal Differential Microcalorimeter

An isochronal differential-type microcalorimeter has been designed and constructed. As a result of its simple design it is very easy to handle the samples and assemble the calorimeter. Important to the operation of the calorimeter is a program, also working on the differential principle, that provides linear temperature rise of the samples. This calorimeter is used to measure very small energy releases such as those found in precipitation, stored energy, etc. It is demonstrated that the calorimeter is easily capable of measuring 0.0005 cal with a probable error of the order of 1% to 2%.
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Arndt, R. A. & Fujita, F. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Re-Analysis of Short-Range Order in Cu3Au (open access)

A Re-Analysis of Short-Range Order in Cu3Au

Cowley's measurements of the short-range order parameters, αi, in Cu3Au at T=405°C have been re-evaluated taking into account the effects of thermal vibrations and static displacements due to differing atomic sizes. The separate corrections for the thermal vibrations and the first-neighbor atomic size factor are found to be quite large, demonstrating their importance in the usual experiments. When combined, the corrections in this case largely cancel, and only the values of α1 and α3 are appreciably changed. The corrected values are: α1= -.113, α2= +.185, α3= -.009, α4= +.082, α5= -.058.
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Walker, C. B. & Keating, D. T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Antibody Formation by Transplanted Bone Marrow, Spleen, Lymph Node and Thymus Cells in Irradiated Recipients (open access)

Antibody Formation by Transplanted Bone Marrow, Spleen, Lymph Node and Thymus Cells in Irradiated Recipients

The role of the marrow as a site for antibody formation has been considered for many years. In 1912 Ludke reported the appearance of antibody in cultures of marrow cells obtained from previously immunized rabbits. Specific agglutinins for killed typhoid bacilli and lysins for ox red cells and sheep red cells were detected in the culture media 2 to 5 days later. However, the cultured cells failed to produce antibody when these antigens were added to the media. Similar findings by Reiter, Przygode, and Schilf appeared in the early literature with regard to the appearance of antibodies to various antigens in tissue cultures of bone marrow from immunized animals, along with failure to elicit antibody formation by addition of antigen to the culture resulted from the addition of excess amounts of antigen, so that if antibody synthesis occurred, the excess antigen combined with antibody and significant amounts of free antibody could not be detected in the culture media. Thorbecke and Keuning observed an increase in antibody in culture fluids when bone marrow fragments from rabbits immunized to paratyphoid B vaccine were cultured in roller tubes.
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Stoner, Richard D. & Bond, Victor P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bromine Exchange in Graphite-Bromine Lamellar Compounds (open access)

Bromine Exchange in Graphite-Bromine Lamellar Compounds

A kinetic study of the exchange of normal and radioactive bromine in graphite-bromine lamellar compounds has been made at temperatures of 30° to 50°C. Natural and synthetic graphite powders were investigated. Two alternative mechanisms for the exchange, volume diffusion and surface exchange, were considered. The data were in better agreement with the diffusion mechanism. Diffusion coefficients of 10 -9 to 10 -8 cm2/sec and an activation energy of 11 to 14 kcal/mole were calculated for the natural graphite powders. The diffusion coefficients increased with increasing bromine content. Reversibly absorbed bromine exchanged more rapidly than irreversibly absorbed bromine.
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Aronson, Seymour
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Crystal Structure of a Sodium Cobalt Molybdate (open access)

Crystal Structure of a Sodium Cobalt Molybdate

The cobalt and molybdenum positions had been derived from a three-dimensional Patterson function based on complete data out to λ-1 sin θMo≈ 1. From the separation of the separation of the Mo atoms it was thought that the structure contained free, unlinked MoO4 -2 ions, and this, together with the observed density and analyses for Co and Mo, suggested that the composition was probably Co2(MoO4)3. The paucity of structural information on complex oxide systems and the interesting properties, both structural and physical, of such systems prompted the present, detailed refinement of the structure. The result is more complicated and more interesting than had been anticipated: from the analysis of the X-ray data the compound is found to be NaCo2.31(MoO4)3, and this composition is consistent with chemical analyses. The structure shows several interesting features, including the partial occupancy of cobalt atoms in two independent CoO6 octahedral sites. In one arrangement of CoO6 octahedra there is the not too common face sharing to form infinite columns; in the other arrangement a zig-zag sheet, as far as we know differing from anything thus far reported, is formed by the sharing of edges and corners.
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Ibers, James A. & Smith, G. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electric Currents, Membranes, and Biological Sources of Electromotive Force (open access)

Electric Currents, Membranes, and Biological Sources of Electromotive Force

The analysis of closed circuit systems in which spontaneous steady-state electric currents appear can be carried out with the use of the function [function not transcribed]. The analysis indicates that any open circuit system of the form. Phase 1, barrier 1, phase 2, ......, phase b, barrier b, phase 1' is a chemical source of electromotive force when the phase 1 and 1' are identical, when the system contains two or more barriers whose sets of ionic transport members are different, and when the system is composed of two or more phases whose chemical properties are different. A general expression for the electromotive force of model systems composed of homogeneous phases and biological membranes in linear array can be written as [expression not transcribed] in which the indicated summations are to be performed for all barriers and for all ions to which each barrier is permeable.
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Nims, Leslie F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Three-Component Body Composition Analysis Based on Potassium and Water Determinations (open access)

Three-Component Body Composition Analysis Based on Potassium and Water Determinations

None
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Anderson, E. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Property evaluation of plutonium sheet used in capacitor discharge studies (open access)

Property evaluation of plutonium sheet used in capacitor discharge studies

At the request of Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, four plutonium strips 0.050 inches thick, 0-50 inches in width and 6 inches in length have been examined by metallographic, chemical, X-ray, density and dilatometric methods. The data obtained will help calibrate high energy electrical discharge equipment used to rapidly heat plutonium.
Date: June 25, 1963
Creator: Taylor, J. M. & Gardner, H. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Warp failure of a thirty-six inch long uranium 2 wt % zirconium alloy tubular fuel element, PT-IP-250-A (RM-568). Final report (open access)

Warp failure of a thirty-six inch long uranium 2 wt % zirconium alloy tubular fuel element, PT-IP-250-A (RM-568). Final report

The N-Reactor will be charged with tubular fuel elements consisting of two components. Both components, an outer tube with a concentric inner tube, have a uranium core, coextruded with a Zircaloy-2 cladding. The testing in support of N-Reactor fuels has been conducted in the experimental loops in the K-East Reactor. Although the process tubes in the KER loops are smaller than the proposed N-Reactor process tubes, the test loops operate at the water temperatures and pressures that will exist in the N-Reactor. To obtain the desired heat fluxes and core temperatures in KER loop test elements, enriched uranium fuel was used. The cladding surface temperatures and fuel temperatures were near anticipated N-Reactor values. Test conditions, results, and conclusions are presented.
Date: January 25, 1963
Creator: Kuhlken, L. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Draft of physics sections to 100-N technical manual (open access)

Draft of physics sections to 100-N technical manual

The information presented is a collection of most of the physics information available for the New Production Reactor. The details of some of the physics information, particularly those dealing with exposure and temperature effects, are by no means to be considered the final word since there has been no experimental verification of these effects. However, the gross physics characteristics described are felt to be reasonable representations of the expected physics behavior of N Reactor and should serve as useful guides throughout the startup planning and initial operation.
Date: January 25, 1963
Creator: Nilson, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Engineering review of stainless steel clad thermocouple elements (open access)

Engineering review of stainless steel clad thermocouple elements

To evaluate the crudding characteristics of ammonium hydroxide conditioned coolant it is necessary to use a thermocouple element. The present design has accentuated structural integrity, reliability and constant heat flux. A radical departure from past designs was made by selecting a stainless steel cladding and enriched ceramic fuel. Three thermocouples are inserted in the cladding to increase the reliability. By the use of two thermocouple elements it will be possible to obtain important preliminary information on preferential crud deposition while simultaneously evaluating the crudding characteristics of ammonium hydroxide conditioned coolant.
Date: March 25, 1963
Creator: FitzPatrick, V. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Waste Management Program: Chemical Processing Department (open access)

Waste Management Program: Chemical Processing Department

During the 18-year history of Hanford operations, a high degree of safety has been provided at reasonable cost by the storage of high-activity liquid wastes in underground tanks, by the percolation of low-activity liquid wastes (principally water) through the soil to the ground water, and by the adsorption or filtration of radioactive materials from gaseous effluents prior to their discharge to the atmosphere. Studies of the Hanford area indicate that current practices could be continued almost indefinitely without jeopardizing environmental safety, provided the stored liquid wastes are periodically transferred to new tanks before the existing ones fail. In 1960, a Fission Product Recovery Program was prepared outlining a plan to meet the Atomic Energy Commission`s needs for isolated fission products. Emphasis was placed on developing processes for isolating selected fission products and on providing interim production capability for recovering the fission products of immediate interest. In 1961, development efforts were channeled almost exclusively toward meeting the immediate needs of the Commission for separated strontium-90 and cesium-137. During this time, it became increasingly evident that substantial economies could be realized, both in immediate development and subsequent operating efforts, if the separate fission product recovery and waste management programs were merged. The …
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Tomlinson, R. E
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status Report No. 4 on Clinch River Study (open access)

Status Report No. 4 on Clinch River Study

The status of radioactive contamination of the Clinch and Tennessee River systems from Nov. 1961 to April 1962 is reviewed. Data are included from studies on the fate of radioactive materials discharged to the Clinch River by the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, the mechanisms of dispersion of radionuclides released to the river, the direct and indirect hazards of waste disposal practices during the period, an evaluation of the over-all usefulness of this river for radioactive disposal purposes, and an evaluation of long-term monitoring procedures. The management of liquid wastes at ORNL is discussed and results are reported from studies on the accumulation and movement of radionuclides in White Oak Creek basin, the contamination of river biota, hydrologic measurements and analyses, measurements of radioactivity in the river system and in community water systems downstream from the Clinch River, and calculation of estimated radiation dosages from drinking Clinch River and Tennessee River water or immersion in the water at various downstream points. Results are included from a preimpoundment study of ecological conditions of Melton Hill Lake and estimates of the effects of Melton Hill Lake and power releases from Melton Hill Dam on hydrologic conditions in the river system. (C.H.)
Date: September 25, 1963
Creator: Morton, R. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
INVESTIGATIONS OF CARBIDES AS CATHODES FOR THERMIONIC SPACE REACTORS. Quarterly Progress Report for the Period Ending May 31, 1963 (open access)

INVESTIGATIONS OF CARBIDES AS CATHODES FOR THERMIONIC SPACE REACTORS. Quarterly Progress Report for the Period Ending May 31, 1963

Two long-term test cells were fabricated and tested. One was loaded with a 30 UC--70 ZrC sample and the other with a 90 UC--10 ZrC samrple. The rates of vaporization of these samaples in vacuum were determined both in the absence and in the presence of a Ni anode maintained at 983 deg K with an electrode spacirig of 20 mils, hr order to set the baseline values. Measurement of the rates of vaporization of these samples under these conditions in the presence of Cs vapor at a pressure of about 1.8 torr are in preparation and will be continued for 1000 hr. Operation of the first test cell, containing the 90 UC- -10 ZrC emitter, was terminated after 510 hr because of leakage through a faulty metal gasket sealing the electron-gun compartment. The second test cell, containing a vapor-deposited W-clad UC emitter, was assembled and operated for a period of 111 hr. The test was terminated because a leak developed between the cell compartment and the electron-gun compartment. A control cell containing a solid W emitter is being assembled to check the modifications made in the design of the electron-gun channber and the filament in order to overcome such …
Date: September 25, 1963
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron Thermalization Programs for the IBM 7090 (open access)

Neutron Thermalization Programs for the IBM 7090

A system of six codes is described that permits the solution of a broad class of problems encountered in the study of neutron thermalization, average cross sections, and spectral models. These programs are all compatible with use on MONITOR for the IBM 7090. The Fortran listings are given. (auth)
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Preskitt, C.A.; Nephew, E.A. & Tsagaris, M.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Vibration and Shock, Highway Transport Between Santa Susana Mountains and Edwards Air Force Base (open access)

Vibration and Shock, Highway Transport Between Santa Susana Mountains and Edwards Air Force Base

A road test, performed on a SNAP 10A mass mockup system, indicated that shock and vibration inputs under actual conditions were not excessive. During the course of travel from the Santa Susana field laboratory to Edwards Air Force Base, and during field trials at Santa Susana, the test system was subjected to only two accelerations exceeding 2 g, and no inputs exceeded 2.4 g. It was concluded that shock and vibration to SNAP systems from highway transporation can be adequately controlled by: selecting the appropriate vehicie, providing proper packaging; specifying route and speed limits for various driving conditions; using ordinary care in loading and unloading; and including suitable shock monitoring instruments with the shipment, (P.C.H.)
Date: January 25, 1963
Creator: Gardner, E. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A TRANSFER FUNCTION FOR D.C. OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIERS WITH GENERALIZED EXTERNAL NETWORKS (open access)

A TRANSFER FUNCTION FOR D.C. OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIERS WITH GENERALIZED EXTERNAL NETWORKS

A transfer function for d-c operational amplifiers with generalized input and feed-back networks is derived by application of network theory. This transfer function, more general than others in common use, applies to three and four-terminal networks. It contains, as a special case, the well-known transfer function for d-c operational amplifiers with two-terminal networks. Examples are given. (auth)
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Gossmann, S.R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
THORIA DISPERSION IN URANIUM (open access)

THORIA DISPERSION IN URANIUM

None
Date: March 25, 1963
Creator: Anderson, R.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fast Analysis System for Bubble Chamber Data (open access)

Fast Analysis System for Bubble Chamber Data

A type of precision measuring instrument, a flying spot digitizer, for the analysis of bubble chamber data is described. When the flying spot encounters a bubble image, it is attenuated typically 25 to 75% depending on the directness of hit and the bubble chamber photographic and operating parameters. The width of the bell-shaped attenuation curve is approximates the sum of the spot and bubble image diameters, or 40 to 50 mu . The high precision of the FSD derives from the fact that it is possible to find the center of area of the attenuation curve to a standard deviation of 3 to 4 mu out of the much larger full-width at the base. Each flying spot coordinate is of a precision approximates equal to that given by a measuring projector, but typically 16 flying spot points are obtained to one measuring-projector point, so that the effective error is only 1/4 as large. The digital electronics problem associated with a flying spot digitizer is basically the trapping of the grating count at the time a bubble image center is found, the storage of the number temporarily until the computer is free, and then the transmission of the coordinate to the …
Date: January 25, 1963
Creator: Hough, P. V. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library